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Cornuda gigante vs Pez león

Sphyrna mokarran comparado con Pterois volitans

Taxonomy & Classification

Atributo Cornuda gigante Pez león
Nombre Científico Sphyrna mokarran Pterois volitans
Orden Carcharhiniformes Scorpaeniformes
Familia Sphyrnidae Scorpaenidae
Conservation Status Critically Endangered Least Concern

Physical Traits

Atributo Cornuda gigante Pez león
Longitud Máxima 610,0 cm 38,0 cm
Peso Máximo 580,0 kg 1,1 kg
Color Brownish-gray to olive-gray dorsal surface with a clean countershaded white belly; no distinct patterning; first dorsal fin is tall and strongly falcate; pelvic fin tips dusky. White to cream body with alternating bold reddish-brown and white vertical bands; fan-like pectoral fins are banded with red-brown and white spots; long dorsal spines are striped and venomous.

Habitat & Environment

Atributo Cornuda gigante Pez león
Tipo de Agua Saltwater Saltwater
Rango de Profundidad 1-300m 2-55m
Distribución Geográfica Circumtropical in warm coastal and offshore waters of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Concentrates around coral reefs, continental shelf edges, and deep-water drop-offs; population … Native to the Indo-Pacific from East Africa and the Red Sea to southern Japan, Australia, and the Marquesas. Invasive in the western Atlantic and Caribbean …
Hábitat Neritic Neritic, coral reefs

Cuisine & Edibility

Cornuda gigante

Critically Endangered — consumption strongly discouraged. Fins are historically traded but the species faces severe population decline; eating this fish is ecologically irresponsible.

Pez león

Sweet, buttery white flesh once spines are safely removed; increasingly promoted as a sustainable food source in Atlantic waters where it is an invasive species.

Species Overview

Cornuda gigante

The great hammerhead is the largest of the nine hammerhead shark species. Its distinctive cephalofoil (hammer-shaped head) houses an array of electroreceptors that allow it to detect stingrays buried beneath the sand.

Pez león

The red lionfish is a venomous coral reef fish native to the Indo-Pacific. Its ornate, striped body and fan-like pectoral fins make it popular in aquariums, but it has become a destructive invasive species in the western Atlantic and Caribbean.

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